Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality.
Synonyms
Examples for "spoil "
Examples for "spoil "
1 However, I also strongly believe in the right to spoil your vote.
2 I wanted to spoil the party by a long way, Abbott said.
3 No way was he going to let a woman spoil the moment.
4 We should not interfere in case we spoil an official criminal investigation.
5 The only result will be to spoil the control of the aeroplane.
1 Nervous intensity may not so much mar the effect of earnest debate.
2 The grandmother remained silent, not to mar the happiness of the child.
3 This would anticipate the author and mar the interest of his story.
4 For some time nothing occurred to mar the peace of the household.
5 I never make in such matters , - or mar if I can help it.
1 Executives for the company said this would not impair its mobile service.
2 PLMS are common in CMT1, but do not significantly impair sleep quality.
3 Hadn't the duke given her enough bloodbane to seriously impair the assassin?
4 Excitations of the bile invariably impair the fine sensitiveness of the palate.
5 Nothing which could in any way impair the living power of Christianity.
1 Does it really think he is so far gone in wickedness to deflower his niece?
2 The lawyer looked at Robbie as if he were asking permission to deflower his daughter.
3 At any rate, I am no male so as to be able to deflower this virgin.'
4 And tonight he had planned to deflower her.
5 The island girls were always so much easier to deflower than their counterparts in the big cities.
Take away the legal force of or render ineffective.
To force sexual intercourse or other sexual activity upon another person, without their consent.
1 Small-pox does not vitiate the blood of a people; this disease does.
2 It is as apt to vitiate the system as to protect it.
3 Encroaching winter and ineffective international commitment may vitiate the humanitarian and redevelopment efforts.
4 Civilization tends to corrupt men, as large towns tend to vitiate the air.
5 Tithes, politics, or something wrong in principle, vitiate every Irish murder.
6 Many causes may vitiate a writer's judgment of his own works.
7 These notions are at least possible, and would they not vitiate your argument?
8 If froward men should refuse this cure, can they vitiate anything but themselves?
9 The author and the public at once vitiate one another.
10 The king was among the first to vitiate his oath, and break the Covenant.
11 And we vitiate that strength when we engage in repression.
12 This assumption would vitiate the promise of his coming made to our first parents.
13 How much of worldly experience would it take to vitiate that integrity in her?
14 A warm body gives rise to air currents which vitiate the accuracy of the weighing.
15 One would say that they have the fatal power to vitiate the atmosphere they breathe.
16 To destroy that order, they vitiate the whole community.
Other examples for "vitiate"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term vitiate
Verb
Indicative · Present